Difference between revisions of "Team:NYU-AD/Advisors"

 
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Advisors
 
Advisors
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<h2>Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani</h2>
 
<h2>Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani</h2>
<p>Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University (Illinois, USA) in Cell and Molecular Biology. He joined Prof. Jack Szostak’s group at Massachusetts General Hospital, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, where he studied catalytic RNAs through in vitro evolution for his postdoctoral work. Following completion of his postdoctoral work, he moved to Center for Cancer Systems Biology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School) as a Group Leader where he developed a number of high throughput platforms for exploration of the coding and metabolic potential of human and model organism genomes, including the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Salehi-Ashtiani joined New York University Abu Dhabi in 2011 as an Associate Professor of Biology and is currently the Managing Director of Center for Genomics and Systems Biology at NYU Abu Dhabi. His group at NYU Abu Dhabi explores fundamental questions on evolution and phenotype-genotype relations through integration of high throughput experimental platforms (such as high throughput sequencing and Phenotype Microarray) with genome-scale metabolic models. His group aims to define the metabolic potential of eukaryotic genomes and use this information to identify strategies for improving bioproduct production in algal systems as well as metabolic perturbations associated with human disease states. Salehi-Ashtiani has been a recipient of multiple US Federal research grants in the past.</p>
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<p>Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University (Evanston, IL, USA) in Cell and Molecular Biology. He joined Prof. Jack Szostak’s group at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he studied catalytic RNAs for his postdoctoral work. Following completion of his postdoctoral work, he moved to Center for Cancer Systems Biology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute as a Group Leader where he developed a number of high throughput platforms for exploration of the coding and metabolic potential of human and model organism genomes. Salehi-Ashtiani joined New York University Abu Dhabi in 2011 as an Associate Professor of Biology. His group aims to define the metabolic potential of eukaryotic genomes and use this information to identify strategies for improving bioproduct production in algal systems, as well as to remediate metabolic perturbations associated with human disease states. </p>
 
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<h2>Quan Vuong</h2>
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<h2>Joseph Koussa </h2>
<p>Another way is to scale the image itself. That's what we have done with the image on the right here. As you can maybe see if you make the window very wide, JPEG images don't scale very well. But if the image is a diagram or a graph in SVG format, scaling in fact works beautifully. Here is the mark-up we used:</p>
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<p>Joseph Koussa was a Lab Instructor at the Lebanese American University for three years, has done his masters in Molecular biology and is currently teaching the Foundation of Sciences lab series at NYUAD. Previous research was focused on yeast genetics and proteomics mainly Candida albicans and is currently involved in protein biochemistry research at Dr. Wael Rabeh’s lab.</p>
 
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<h2>Jovan Jovancevic</h2>
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<h2>Kenan Jijakli</h2>
<p>Another way is to scale the image itself. That's what we have done with the image on the right here. As you can maybe see if you make the window very wide, JPEG images don't scale very well. But if the image is a diagram or a graph in SVG format, scaling in fact works beautifully. Here is the mark-up we used:</p>
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<p>Kenan Jijakli has a formal education in Engineering where his interest in bioremediation of waste fostered a deeper interest in biology. He later received a fellowship at New York University and New York University in Abu Dhabi that he spent studying and researching synthetic biology, genomics and molecular biology. He is currently a researcher at the Laboratory for Algal, Systems and Synthetic Biology at New York University in Abu Dhabi where he works on diverse projects that range from microfluidics to basic molecular biology. </p>
 
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Latest revision as of 21:14, 18 September 2015

Advisors

Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani

Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University (Evanston, IL, USA) in Cell and Molecular Biology. He joined Prof. Jack Szostak’s group at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he studied catalytic RNAs for his postdoctoral work. Following completion of his postdoctoral work, he moved to Center for Cancer Systems Biology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute as a Group Leader where he developed a number of high throughput platforms for exploration of the coding and metabolic potential of human and model organism genomes. Salehi-Ashtiani joined New York University Abu Dhabi in 2011 as an Associate Professor of Biology. His group aims to define the metabolic potential of eukaryotic genomes and use this information to identify strategies for improving bioproduct production in algal systems, as well as to remediate metabolic perturbations associated with human disease states.

Joseph Koussa

Joseph Koussa was a Lab Instructor at the Lebanese American University for three years, has done his masters in Molecular biology and is currently teaching the Foundation of Sciences lab series at NYUAD. Previous research was focused on yeast genetics and proteomics mainly Candida albicans and is currently involved in protein biochemistry research at Dr. Wael Rabeh’s lab.

Kenan Jijakli

Kenan Jijakli has a formal education in Engineering where his interest in bioremediation of waste fostered a deeper interest in biology. He later received a fellowship at New York University and New York University in Abu Dhabi that he spent studying and researching synthetic biology, genomics and molecular biology. He is currently a researcher at the Laboratory for Algal, Systems and Synthetic Biology at New York University in Abu Dhabi where he works on diverse projects that range from microfluidics to basic molecular biology.